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  • Spielberg's Shoah Foundation widens scope

    Spielberg's Shoah Foundation widens scope
    By Anthony Breznican, USA TODAY

    USA TODAY
    April 23, 2007

    Steven Spielberg's Shoah Foundation is expanding beyond the Holocaust
    to document survivor memories from other atrocities.

    After collecting 52,000 interviews, the filmmaker's unprecedented
    effort to record the stories of those who survived Nazi persecution
    during World War II is now applying the mantra "Never forget" to more
    recent acts of genocide and oppression.

    "Now we ask ourselves: How do we make this vision a priority in
    communities all across the world?" Spielberg said.

    The announcement came Monday night at a benefit dinner featuring
    Spielberg and other leaders from the Shoah organization, attended by
    hundreds of Hollywood power brokers.

    "Our work on the Holocaust will continue. But we plan to join it
    now to work with others around the world," said Douglas Greenberg,
    executive director of the Shoah Foundation Institute at the University
    of Southern California. "Our commitment is to combat (violence and
    racism) wherever and however we can - no matter who the victims are."

    Greenberg said the Shoah group has begun early discussions to enact
    similar programs focusing on genocide in Rwanda and Cambodia as well
    as stories of life under apartheid in South Africa.

    "The obligation to remember is a moral responsibility that all of
    us owe to all of those who have suffered violence and racism in the
    modern world, whether they are Jews or Armenians or Cambodians or
    Rwandans or Darfuris," Greenberg said.

    Spielberg said the Shoah Foundation was "my second career," founded
    "with a dream of a world where the memories of the victims of history's
    greatest crime could be used to teach new generations that hatred is
    not something we are born with, but something we acquire."

    He created the foundation after finishing his Oscar-winning Schindler's
    List nearly 14 years ago, saying he was overwhelmed by the personal
    stories he heard from Holocaust survivors after the movie came
    out. Creating a library of those people telling their own stories
    would have a power he said he couldn't replicate in a movie.

    Spielberg presented the Shoah Foundation's inaugural Ambassador for
    Humanity award to Wallis Annenberg, vice president of the philanthropic
    Annenberg Foundation, founded by her billionaire publishing family.

    Monday night's event was hosted by Jerry Seinfeld, who brought
    levity to the sometimes serious proceedings. In his opening remarks
    he deadpanned: "It's fantastic to be here. I am Jewish ... as are my
    parents also."

    http://www.usatoday.com/life/people/2 007-04-24-spielberg-shoah_N.htm?csp=34
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